Keto Chocolate Chip Cookies

My low carb chocolate chip cookies got a little update! These delicious keto chocolate chip cookies are now bigger and better, with an instructional video to show you exactly how to make them.

Chocolate chip cookies, straight out of the oven. Still warm and slightly underbaked so that they are really gooey in the center. The chocolate so melty, it oozes out onto your plate as you break the cookie apart. This is my idea of heaven. I am fairly certain that this is most people’s idea of heaven.

But when you decide to go low carb and gluten-free, that lovely vision of the promised land begins to recede rather quickly. It is the magical intersection of flour and sugar that creates a texture that is both chewy and crispy at the same time, and when you decide to forego both of these ingredients, a good chocolate chip cookie seems like a thing of the past. I pride myself on being REALLY good with low carb, gluten-free ingredients but I have despaired of being able to achieve that crispy-chewy quality with almond flour or coconut flour.

How To Make Keto Chocolate Chip Cookies

However, I am willing to keep trying and keep experimenting to see if I can achieve even a close approximation. Yes, friends, I am willing to sacrifice my precious time and energy, not to mention ingredients, to better the world with a really good low carb chocolate chip cookie recipe.

It is a worthy cause, a very worthy cause indeed. Because there is no doubt in my mind that your lives would be vastly improved by such a cookie. Everyone’s lives would be vastly improved. We would all be happier, healthier, stronger, fitter, faster, calmer, and kinder, if such a cookie was in existence. Wars would cease and the world would be at peace. So you can see why I am willing to martyr myself to such a noble cause. It has nothing to do with the deliciousness of the results (or the unbaked cookie batter). Nothing at all, I swear

And so I offer you the results of one such experiment. As low carb cookies go, these are seriously good. Here are my observations:

They have a lovely slight crispness and, dare I say, a slight chewiness as well.

I’ve discovered that a little shredded coconut can go a long way to improve the texture. I added just enough finely shredded coconut to give the cookies a little more structure without a strong coconut flavour.

They are, without question, the best low carb chocolate chip cookies I’ve ever made and that’s saying a lot. Low carb cookies often have a cakey quality and these do not, which is a real treat.

I modeled this low carb cookie recipe after the cookies in my Muesli Cream Pies, because I noticed when I made those, they had a slight crispness I hadn’t been able to achieve before. I figured it had something to do with having less almond flour in the batter, but I had to find a good replacement for the muesli so that my cookie batter didn’t completely melt and run all over the pan.

Chewy Keto Chocolate Chip Cookie

Want them extra chewy? Try adding a tablespoon of grassfed gelatin along with the almond flour. It’s a trick I just learned and I applied to to my Low Carb Chewy Ginger Cookies. I actually haven’t tried it out here yet but I can’t see why it wouldn’t work!

If you’re looking for really good Paleo Chocolate Chip Cookies, look no further than these beauties from Texanerin Baking. You could probably replace the coconut sugar with your favourite low carb sweetener.

More Great Keto Cookie Recipes

Secrets to Keto Baking

Tips and tricks to delicious and healthy recipes!

Nutritional Disclaimer

Please note that I am not a medical or nutritional professional. I am simply recounting and sharing my own experiences on this blog. Nothing I express here should be taken as medical advice and you should consult with your doctor before starting any diet or exercise program.
I provide nutritional information for my recipes simply as a courtesy to my readers. It is calculated using MacGourmet software and I remove erythritol from the final carb count and net carb count, as it does not affect my own blood glucose levels. I do my best to be as accurate as possible but you should independently calculate nutritional information on your own before relying on them.
I expressly disclaim any and all liability of any kind with respect to any act or omission wholly or in part in reliance on anything contained in this website.

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Comments

You need something sort of lacy, like shredded coconut, to get the right consistency. I can’t guarantee it will work but for someone else, I suggested taking sliced almonds and grinding them up so that they aren’t like almond flour but are a little bit bigger and resemble finely shredded coconut. I hope it will come out the same…either way, it will still taste great!

Your *best* low carb chocolate chip cookie? Hmm. I think I might have to make these! I think I’ll play around with the sweetener and see what happens (but I promise I won’t leave you a dumb comment about how my cookies didn’t come out although I didn’t follow the recipe ;))

1 and 1/4 cups (Ziplist formatting makes those fractions look so strange!). I don’t know if it will work with ground almonds for certain, but it’s certainly worth a try. Grind them as finely as you can without turning them into almond butter! 🙂

I wouldn’t say this is strictly true. Honeyville sells a “natural” almond meal that has the skin still on. And some places blanch the almonds but then don’t grind them finely enough to call them flour. I think what really makes the difference is how finely ground the almonds are. And I do think that the best almond flours are made from blanched almonds.

This is so funny! I’ve been making every low carb chocolate chip cookie recipe I can find to find that perfect cookie. I may have made four different batches in the past 48 hours… I eventually created my own that I adapted from my favorite high carb recipe. It comes very close to the crispy chewy cookie that we are both looking for. Unfortunately, it’s the best right after baking. They don’t retain their crispiness long. I was surprised that they taste awesome straight out of the oven because most low carb cookies taste better after they have cooled.

I can’t wait to try yours! My all time favorite chocolate chip cookie is a oatmeal chocolate chip cookie and from reading the ingredients it seems like this cookie would have a similar mouth feel. 🙂

Super late to the game, but I made these last weekend (subbing 1/2 cup butter for a scant 1/2 cup coconut oil….I’m pretty much dairy free!) and after the party I brought them to, I got a bunch of emails asking for the recipe! Definitely worked, and it was a hit. Love this recipe, sent it to a bunch of people. 🙂

My first batch, I used butter. They were great. Next time, I was out ofbutter & used lard instead. They were even better!
Beautifully browned and crisp-like on the edges and gorgeous tender crumb in the middle. I though it was my own prejudice so I did a taste test the next time. One batch butter, & one batch lard. Both my test subjects preferred the lard one for texture, but the butter one for taste.

Well, I should add that flavor won out. I noticed each one ate the butter ones & I had the lard ones left over. I am just thrilled to find a recipe that really comes very close to real sugar cookies. All my previous ones were cake-like. Its nice to know that subs do work too.

I don’t use almond flour in baked goods anymore because of the high omega6 content and calories. I was literally thrilled that you came up with a coconut flour based recipe … until I saw the ingredients! Well, at least I’m not tempted to eat a batch of chocolate cookies 🙂 Anyway, I love your inspiring recipes and will continue to stop by!

Sorry about that, but to each his own. But honestly, I believe all the fuss about almond flour to be too much. Nothing should be eaten exclusively, but if you’re eating many other wonderful foods with Omega 3’s, then it shouldn’t be such a concern. It’s the ratio of 3’s to 6’s in our body that’s most important. I eat maybe one thing per day made with almond flour, which usually amounts to a few tbsp per day. In these cookies, the 1 1/4 cup of almond flour is divided between 14 servings. That’s about 1.5 tbsp per serving of two cookies.

I whole heartedly agree with your reply. Moderation and variety. I don’t understand a person needing to leave you a back handed compliment. As though you wasted her Laura’s time by having “coconut” in the name of your recipe. My family LOVES your site, it’s our go to for recipes we know will be delicious and beautiful. Thank you for providing a resource for so many healthy recipes!

I love chocolate and coconut together and in cookies it sounds fantastic I’ve never tried Swerve before let alone seen it. I will look for it at the store. How does it compare in sweetness to granulated sugar.

I’d like suggest using Zsweet instead of Swerve. It measures 1 for 1 in recipes and tastes very good. I’ve used it in several cheesecakes and cookies. Great alternative for those of us doing lchf lifestyle. Amazon has it.

Thank you for such a lovely, delicious diabetic friendly recipe for one of my family’s favorite cookies!
My mouth is watering already so off to bake a couple of batches with Kerry Gold butter, Swerve, and my beloved blackstrap molasses. I have been using 85% -90% Lindt dark chocolate bars, chopping up the bars to make small chunks instead of chocolate chips because even the semi-sweet dark chocolate chips elevate my blood sugars.

Yep, semi-sweet chips are often only about 60% cacao, so there’s a lot more sugar in them. They elevate my sugars too. Enjoy! I do the Lindt bars a lot of the time. I actually like the 90% better, it has great flavour.

These look yummy! I don’t have swerve, but I do have Tagatose would that be an equal swap? I generally use the same exact amounts of regular sugar swapped with Tagatose for recipes – Is swerve swapped out the same way?

BTW have you tried Tagatose? I LOVE LOVE LOVE the stuff, make the BEST caramel sauce.

I used Stevia as the sweetner and carob chips instead of chocolate chips. I also substituted 1/2 the amount of butter for greek yogurt. They turned out fabulously. Thank you so much for putting something like this together.

It’s NuNaturals PreSweet Tagatose, it’s the closest thing to sugar I’ve ever had and it carmelizes! You have to try this stuff out, I’m not really a baker so I’d love to see what you can do with this stuff. It’s also a prebiotic and antioxidant, crazy right?! I sound like I work for them or something, but I promise I don’t – just really love being able to easily whip up caramel and sweetened condensed milk without having a billion different ingredients. Only downside it’s pricey. Oh and it was just approved as a diabetes treatment, seriously Google Tagatose lots of info and studies.

I made these this weekend, and they were fabulous. Thank you so much for the recipe. Three grandkids all loved them, too. They’ve never tried anything LC or GF, so they were surprised by how great they were! Kudos! I will be adding this one to my baking rotation, for sure! (Oh, and they are delightful with a cup of coffee!)

I used Honeyville almond flour and Bob’s Red Mill coconut. It seemed pretty finely shredded, but maybe next time I will run it through the food processor to be sure – and there will be a next time. My husband scarfed half the batch down anyway! Thanks!

These are so delicious! Because it is so hot here, I will refrigerate the Lindt bar because it melted a little too much in the cookie. Anyway, I am super excited because I answered on your blog my grocery store (HEB in Sugar Land) where I wanted Swerve and it was here this week! So of course I want them to keep stocking it, so I bought 9 bags (5 for my sister in another town). I am so happy the Swerve company listened!

Yummy! I just made these and they were delicious! I had two straight from the oven with a glass of unsweetened vanilla almond milk! The only changes I made were to use xylitol in place of Swerve (because that’s what I had on hand) and I added a couple of tablespoons of chopped pecans because I think chocolate chip cookies need a few nuts! Thanks for the great recipe!

These taste great! Some subs worked fine (regular erythritol — but just over 1/4 c with 1/2 tsp or so powdered stevia, 1/4 c almond meal for 1/4 c of the almond flour, 1/4 tsp xanthan gum, due to a comment). With the subs they didn’t get crispy, but they hold together well. I’ll try freezing and with ice cream, and with some cinnamon next time. Thanks!

Just made these today and they are amazing! Definitely the closest thing to a “real” wheat/suagr filled chocolate chip cookie, and believe me, I’ve tried lots out there! Carolyn’s recipes rock & I’ve had success with all the ones I’ve tried. Love her & love this blog!!!!!

2 tsp of molasses for the whole recipe amounts to about 1 carb per cookie. You can skip it but they won’t brown as nicely. I don’t know the calorie count but you can easily enter the ingredients into a program like My Fitness Pal. I think that’s what most people use.

I personally don’t get a spike from that tiny amount per serving. But everyone is different. Feel free to cut it down to 1 tsp (which has all of 6 g of carbs total and will add less than .5 g of carbs.

Amazing recipe!
They are so yummy, they taste just like a coconut macaroon with the crispiness on the outside and the chewy inside YUM! I used 1/2 cup granulated sugar in mine and it was perfect..
these are my new fav cookies for sure!

This is my second baking recipe I tried from your blog. We ate these warm during a movie night. Yummy! They were very delicious. I do prefer them hot instead of cold though. I thought the coconuty flavor was more dominate when cold. BUT i did use medium ground coconut as I had that on hand already. I will test again with finely ground coconut. Also had to cook slightly longer for same amount of cookies.

Since going low carb, I am desperately in search for a really good cookie!
I don’t like my previous results, every batch was too cakey and soft, like a muffin.

I don’t mind a bit coconut in your recipe and will definitely try to make these cookies on saturday but I wanted to know how the texture of the chocolate chop cookies from Maria Emmerich are in comparison to yours – maybe that’s not the right place to ask this but I remember you commented on her post that you would try them… http://mariamindbodyhealth.com/the-best-chocolate-chip-cookie/

Marias cookies were too soft but maybe it depends on the sweetener you use – I only had xylitol on hand. I liked you’re version and my family gobbled them up;) I added less shredded coconut and used xylitol again… next time I will definitely follow the recipe as written. Thanks for your work!

Tried your ccc recipe today for my daughter – she was craving chocolate. The taste is great, but ours turned out crumbly. We were low on almond flour and had to sub hazelnut meal for some. Will try again! Thank you. 🙂

1/2 cup of Splenda. I have since also made it with 1/4 cup Splenda and 2 Tbsp agave because my husband hates artificial sweeteners, also with great results. I have to say, everyone likes these best warm…

1. I used Truvia (I didn’t have Swerve). The conversion was 3-1/2 T. of truvia. I should have used 4 T.
2. I used 90% cacao chocolate (the highest I could find, since it said high-cacao chocolate). IT WAS MUCH TOO BITTER for cookies. So, for your readers, they should go with no more than 70% cacao – I found out that if you can’t eat it straight out of the package, it’s not going to be good in cookies, either.

Of course, I’m still going to eat them, because a cookie is a cookie, right? 🙂

Thanks for your tips. Actually, I used 90% cacao in my version and didn’t find it too bitter, so I think that one has to be personal taste. I love the super-dark chocolate and I eat it straight out of the package all the time! 🙂

I want to thank you for this wonderful recipe. I made my 4th batch of these cookies last night. My husband and I both enjoy them, but the true test came when my daughter’s teenage friends started eating them . . . and loved them. (Never realizing they weren’t made with sugar and wheat!) I followed the recipe exactly as shared, but baked them quite a bit longer this time to go for the “crisp.”

I can’t remember if I told you, but they have xylitol chocolate chips in France now. Isn’t that cool? I’ll be making this today. I have been “hovering” around your site, but need to get back into the business of baking. I’ve been out of sync since summer.

So interestingly enough, I made these with coconut sugar today, for my Crossfit group. They were a hit. Do 1/3 cup coconut sugar because it melts and spreads more than erythritol. Add a little extra sweetness with stevia (maybe 1/4 tsp)? I did mine a little differently because I was making a bigger batch.
Do a test cookie and if you find it spreading too much while baking, add 1 or 2 tbsp of coconut flour to help firm them up a bit. That’s what I had to do this morning.

These are THE best low-carb chocolate chip cookies I’ve ever made (and I’ve tried countless other recipes)!!! Thank you so much! I just finished the last of the cookies that I baked on…well, I’m not going to admit how quickly I finished them. 🙂 The shredded coconut makes these chewy without making them taste like coconut. I made an ice cream sandwich with a couple of them using my own vanilla bean frozen custard. Yum!

By the way, I found sugar-free chocolate chips at Whole Foods. They’re sweetened with stevia…I can’t remember the brand.

These look amazing. I have been low carbing for a year now…it is has to be my only way of eating and I have been scouring the internet looking for some new sweet treats.

I have 100% cacao bar unsweetened…will that work, or does it have to have some kind of sweetener in it. I am only asking because after the listing for cacao it says “or make sugar free chocolate chip….thanks for answering my questions.

I made these tonight for a cookie exchange for work tomorrow. My husband and I are not fond of coconut, but we both loved the cookies. My husband is also not on board the low-carb lifestyle, but kept fighting to go grab another cookie.

Just baked these! They were so lovely! Thank you so much 🙂 initially I was quite worried since they came out soft and crumbly. But then I remembered that was probably because of the almond flour 🙂 I used zsweet since I didn’t have swerve, and I also excluded the molasses. It’s so so so good! I’m going to bring them to class to share with my friends this afternoon 🙂 thank you again!

I honestly don’t feel qualified to say so you should contact Swerve. They are really good about answering people’s questions. As for coconut sugar, I have made these with it and you need less. It spreads more than Swerve, so go a little lighter on it.

wonderful! I used 1/8 of a cup (2 tbsp?) of Stevia in the raw – and one tablespoon of natural peanut butter, 85% Godiva chocolate. The dough alone was so good! I’m not a fan of store bought, unsweetened shredded coconut (I swear it’s just what’s left over after they take out all the milk, cream and oil) – tastes like sawdust. So I used the unsweeetened flaked- and processed it into a little finer texture. Everything turned out just lovely! thank you 🙂

Hi, thank you so much for this recipe! it looks great.
i am only 12, but i’m gluten-free and really like to bake! your website is my favorite place 2 go.
I made these for some people that came over, (doubled the recipe) they were gone in a few minutes. i love all your other recipes 2!!!!

oh……my………gosh! I made these cookies last night and they are so good. I couldn’t believe I was actually eating a chocolate chip cookie. For the first time in years. I have recently changed from splenda to now stevia and swerve and I was worried about the change but in these cookies it was delicious. I just about feel guilty for having cookies, like will they get me fat? ha, ha. I did use sugar free syrup instead of the molasses and I used sugar free chocolate chips, they both have malitol in them but it doesn’t bother me in lesser amounts. I also put in one dropper of stevia to the mix and the sweetness of the cookies turned out good. Thanks Carolyn, I am such a fan of yours and am going to try the zucchini sausage breakfast bake soon, the ingredients sound good together.

BEST LOW CARB COOKEIES EVER! No Joke! It’s a rare day that a low carb baking recipe turns out on my first go. I did however, have to bake them closer to 20 minutes per sheet. But they taste perfect and have the best texture of any low carb cookie I’ve baked to date… Well, any low carb baked anything I’ve ever made, to be honest. They are moist, perfectly sweet and chewy. Enough to fix any low carbers sweet tooth. Thank you so much for the recipe share.

What are your thoughts on using 2 types of sweetener vs. just 1? I am curious because before I went low carb, I always thought the best cookies had a mix of white sugar and brown sugar. But I suppose the same rules might not apply to low carb baking.

Wow, I never knew that. Learned something new. I made the cookies this weekend. They were pretty good. Not great cause I used Bob’s red mill instead of Honeyville almond flour. It’s just too coarse for this kind of recipe. Will have to try again after I get my hands on the Honeyville almond flour.

I just made these, and they were great!!!
I am allergic to dairy so I used palm shortening, I also used a combo of xylitol, erythritol and stevia. I also see that I somehow used 1 1/2 cup of almond flour instead of 1 1/4 cup. They still turned out amazing!!!! Thank you so much for thisv recipe.

I made these today. The dough is good lol…. but I think my oven doesnt heat properly. I baked for about 16 mins and they didnt set up like a done cookie. I put them in awhile longer and they got browner but crumbled up. Can I bake them on 350 in attempts to compensate? A few weeks ago another recipe I tried also didnt get done and I baked it along time so I do think it may be that my oven isnt heating properly

Ok, these made delicious treats,, substitute the butter for some budda… im actually getting ready to make another batch of regular ones for the wife. my were a little to close so they melted into each other… Thanks

My grandchildren came over so I thought I would try them beings that my granddaughter is a diabetic and also has to eat gluten free. Well my grandson said he would measure everything out for me (he is 11)Well we made them and instead of putting in molasses he put in sugar free syrup. Well they held together but we tasted them and they didn’t seem sweet at all very bland. I ask him about what he had put in and we went over everything and he forgot the swerve. W laughed. Oh well, I will make them again and make sure I put everything in it. We had a good time even with the 2 year old.

Thank you so much for the recipe!!! These are easily the best low carb cookies I’ve ever had the pleasure to bake and eat! And as an added bonus, the cookie dough was just as delicious (cookie dough is a weakness of mine) 😉 One thing I learned was to FOLLOW THE RECIPE and leave them to cool in the tin for 5 minutes before transferring to wire rack as otherwise they crumble. Oh, well. I was just in too much of a hurry to try one!

What kind of stevia sweetener? I really think you need a bulk granulated sweetener for this recipe. The BRM almond meal would be okay (since I have used the hazelnut meal in this same recipe to great success), but I think the problem may be the sweetener.

Omg, these are so good! I’m very new to the whole low-carb concept, and I decided to give these a try. In fact, my roommate begged me to make these, they looked so good. I’ve never worked with these “weird” ingredients (almond flour, molasses, Swerve–thank goodness my local store carried them), but making them was very easy. Low-carb sweet treats are notoriously bad tasting, yet I was drawn by your claim that these were the best ever. You were absolutely right! I happen to love coconut so the combination with chocolate was awesome. These are definitely not only a make-again but one of the best cookies I’ve ever made!

hey there! I just took these out of the oven and they smell great. But i had a hiccup. They were in for 1.5 minutes when I realized I forgot the baking powder! I took them out and threw them back in the bowl. I knew if I stirred them, the somewhat melted chocolate would disperse, but I was way too impatient to throw the bowl in the fridge for an hour. So I figured I’d just go for choc chocolate chip cookies. 🙂 anyhow! A few questions for you while I sit here contemplating my mistake…why baking powder instead of baking soda? The molasses would certainly act as an acid. Most cookies use soda and when I’ve accidentally used powder instead, it resulted in a more cakey cookie than a chewy one. Also! Have you ever refrigerated the dough first? And, finally…how about browsing the butter to get that caramelization? Sorry I have so many questions. Just figured as you’ve tested, you might have some answers. Thanks so much!

My husband is a chocolate chip maniac, but since going LCHF a few years ago, he’s been sorely disappointed by the 10+ recipes we’ve tried. These babies are the first exception! He (ahem, we) love them so much that I make up a batch pretty much weekly.

SO, I chose to bring them to a party a few nights ago with no other LCHF eaters. I was so nervous that non-LCHF people wouldn’t like the taste, but grown men were yelling across the room to tell me how good they were! And 3 women asked me for the recipe. Yay! Thank you for such an awesome cookie recipe! =)

Another favorite from Carolyn! I’ve made these twice and both times they were delicious and nice and simple.
But the first time i made them, my cookies all combined in the oven. it was too runny i think. i fixed it by adding:
1)a tiny bit more coconut
2) using a 1 and 1/3 cup of almond flour instead of a 1 and 1/4

I will honestly probably make these for christmas because they are so simple and yummy.

Hi Carolyn, I really loved the cookies, and I like coconut, but I would love a batch without the coconut. I know you have suggested subbing in some ground almonds – what about chia seeds or flax seeds or chia meal or flax meal. Would you think that might work in place of the coconut flakes? I am seeking for a sub that is neutral so I taste more chocolate chip.

Made these today and OMG yummy! I used organic real sugar instead of the artificial, (thank you for posting the cup for cup comment for substituting sugars). And I omitted the molasses, only because my husband wasn’t home to reach it for me. Would have been about 5 dozen but I ate a great deal of the batter between batches, so ended up with 4 dozen. Thank You for this recipe, I will be making it often.

I am new to gluten free and low carb. I wanted a gluten free recipe for a friend. I haven’t yet found the Swerve but I really wanted to try these cookies anyway. Then when so many reviews said to buy Honeyville almond flour and I saw the price, I just about passed on these altogether. But, thank goodness I didn’t. I happened to have a bunch of almonds and a fancy blender, so I blanched them and made my own flour. I sifted it and made sure the almond flour was fine. Without the Swerve, I decided to just try them with regular sugar (please don’t gasp). I did bake just 2 cookies at first because my cookie dough was too soft to be flattened so I knew it was not right. So I added more almond flour to my batter and achieved a better, although not perfect spread factor. What I am wondering is – am I measuring my almond flour wrong? I just dumped some into my measuring cup and leveled it off (like I would do with wheat flour). The almond flour seems to pack quite easily, so maybe even scooping it with my measuring cup would have given me more flour in my recipe. I can really see the advantage of the European way of weighing ingredients instead of the volume method.
By the way – tomorrow I am going to a store that sells Swerve and I plan on making these again this weekend.
They are so tasty. They are rich enough that 2 cookies actually does satisfy without the undying need to eat more.
Please tell me how you measure your almond flour.

I measure by scoop and level but I can tell you right now that no matter how well you grind your almonds, you can’t get it as fine as a commercial brand like Honeyville and I suspect that is the issue.

These are good and I loved making our own chocolate SF chips!
The response to the coconut was mixed in our family of 3.. I thought it was pretty noticeable in taste/texture. — My ATKINS hubby liked it – and he has stated a dislike of coconut for as long as we’ve been married – and as the low carber in the family his preference rules!. My 23 year old daughter disliked and compared it to her dislike of macaroons. I loved it — I love coconut. We didn’t order the almond flour that was recommended but we bought Bob’s Red Mill locally. The cookies were chewy and crispy, but they spread a lot more than I expected while baking. Thanks for your continuing experimentation with these recipes!

The spreading more would be the almond flour since Bob’s is coarser than Honeyville. You could use all almond flour in this (sub the coconut for almond flour) but you do end up with a softer, less crisp cookie.

I made these again for hubby and his “coconut detector” went off! What he didn’t notice the first time he did this time. So, I need to try your alternative suggestion or something else. At least, this has gotten us to loving the dark chocolate home made chocolate chips!

I just made these for the first time and they’re amazing! I did tweak it a tad by adding 1/4C oat bran (for fiber) and 1oz (1 scoop) vanilla protein powder, so mine are a bit higher in carbs but it gave the cookies the consistance of oatmeal chocolate chip cookies! Absolutely scrumptious. Thank you!

Revised your recipe by using Red Mill Hazelnut flour-it is lower in carbs-woo-hoo! That was the only revision I made. Mine only needed 12 min baking time. When you’re ever in doubt with cookie baking time, error on the shorter time. I ate 2 immediately out-of-the-oven-YUM!
So I thought they would get firmer once the fat got cooler-so I put them in the ‘fridge. They are soooo good, straight from the fridge! I love them, and I can’t say that about too many lc recipes. Some just don’t taste all that great. These are surprising little gems! I am a coconut freak so the chocolate coconut combo is perfect! This is a winner!!!

My glucometer indicates that I am very sensitive to erythritol, despite what “everyone” says. I have made homemade choc chips using stevia (also available commercially) but they are really nasty. I’m thinking of using half the Swerve in your recipes (plus some stevia), as I am not quite as sensitive to Swerve, plus, to me it tastes much sweeter than other substitutes. How do you think the texture would be affected?
I think that this would be my ultimate dream.

I do think the texture would change a bit and they might be a little less crispy/chewy. But if that’s what’s going to work best for your blood sugar, than I think it’s worth a try. What kind of stevia are you using? The powder or the liquid?

Interesting! In these cookies, if I was replacing part of the Swerve with stevia, I’d either put a little shake of powdered stevia in at the butter creaming stage, or a dropper full of liquid stevia in at the stage where I put the egg in.

Thanks so much for the response. I have a storage question – if I make these prior to the party I’m planning, how much earlier can it be (I read in one of the comments that they can be frozen)? Can I just leave them in an air-tight container on the counter? Fridge?
hri
Also, can I cut these with a cookie cutter into shapes or would it not work out?

OK — I may be late to the chocolate chip cookie party, but I’m here now. Just made these tonight and OH my giddy aunt — they are amazing!!! Super delicious and easy to make. They taste simply fabulous and I love the texture. I used my (new-to-me) Hershey’s sugar-free chocolate chips and even though I had to bake them about 16 minutes (darn my oven) – they are just perfect! Thanks again Carolyn for creating this recipe!! 🙂

My husband asked me what bad stuff was in the biscuits. …I said there was no bad stuff and then enquired why he’d asked and he replied “because they taste REALLY good”. Before he reached for a third, I did mention that they still had calories, lol.

I started mixing these up only to realize that I was out of almond flour! Oops. :-/ I substituted defatted peanut flour in it’s place. It’s the only change I made. Oh. My. Yum!!! This one is going into my dessert recipe rotation.

These are addictive! Delicious. I ate 8 as soon as they cooled. I didn’t have Swerve so I used Pyure Stevia erythritol blend and they were very sweet. Used a 70% dark chocolate 4oz bar chopped up and increased the almond flour to 1.5 cups to make a few more cookies. The batch made 23 cookies. My only complaint is they are very greasy. Could Greek yogurt be substituted for the butter? Even if they were a bit cake like I wouldn’t mind.

I know this thread and comments are old, however, I made this recipe yesterday and they are delicious! I increased my flaked coconut to 1 cup, used 1 c of erythritol (instead of Swerve), left out the molasses, and added 1/4 t of cinnamon.
For chocolate, I used 3.5 oz of Lily’s stevia sweetened chocolate chips.
This is our official new go-to keto chocolate chip cookie! DELISH! Mine also stayed nice and crispy. 🙂

I tried this recipe tonight! I added mac nuts and a tablespoon of coffee flour that I found at Trader Joes. the coffee flour has 7g of carbs, but 6g of fiber (plus only a tablespoon for the whole batch) so I think the nutritional info is still pretty close. Great crunch, texture, and taste! these will be a repeat recipe for sure, thanks so much!

These were amazing!!!! I used a mixture of 3 different sweetners (3 packets of Truvia, about a fourth of a cup of granulated Splenda and for the rest used swerve to fill up the rest of the one half measuring cup) to avoid the cooling effect and it worked great! I also probably added half as much chocolate and added 1/4 of a cup of pecans. THese are going to be a favorite! Thank you, thank you!

I made these exactly as instructed. I used “Lily’s” chocolate chips. They are freaking amazing!! Have to hold strong so I don’t eat them all before hubby gets home. Thank you, thank you, thank you for this recipe!!

Hi Carolyn,
I make these often, as they are a favourite of hubby’s. For me, I quit sugar long before going strictly low carb, so I find most recipes are too sweet. I’ve been cutting the sweetener down, and would like to reduce it more, but I expect it really needs the bulk for the texture. What would you suggest, if I drop the swerve to 1/4 cup or even less ?
I have this issue with every sweet recipe I bake, so whatever you suggest here, can I assume it will work for other recipes too ?
I’m really happy with how most things turn out, but suspect something to compensate for less sweetener in all my baking will produce results out of the oven that are even better.
A big Thankyou for helping us stay low carb.
Carolyn M

They may lose some chewiness from cutting down the sweetener but they won’t be too bad. As for every other recipe…it depends. Most cakes and cookies and baked goods, you’re fine. Frostings and puddings and mousses may be too runny or not set if you don’t use all the sweetener.

OK Thank you. I have both gelatin and xanthun gum. Which would be best for frostings etc if I cut the sweetener in them ? I’m guessing the gum could be whisked in, while gelatin would need to be dissolved first.

Is the cookie part yummy? Not a fan of chocolate in my cookies but always loved the cookie part. Thought about adding some walnuts or pecans (small amount) and leaving out the chocolate chips. I know…………..I’m the weird sister! 🙂

Thank you for this delicious recipe!! I love that these are not cakey. I recently started low-carb and was very disappointed with the 5 recipes I’ve previously tried. The molasses adds a really nice touch. Can’t wait to try more of your recipes!

Hi good day.
I am from South Africa, I can’t get swerve here but there’s is something called suki which is a xylitol and steviol extract blend.
I want to know if I use suki will the cookies turn out to be crispy?
What can I substitute swerve with to get a crispy cookie.
I tried many different recipes of cookies and all turned out soft. I also tried your coconut almond crisps they also turned soft.

I can’t wait to make these, although I’m a little nervous about eating only 2 instead of the whole batch 😩. I’m 1 week into a Keto diet and really missing desserts, among other thing. Glad I found your blog!

My 8 year old and I just made these and we are pleasantly pleased. My lil girl rates all recipes with a thumbs up, thumbs side ways, or
thumbs down. This was a double thumbs up!! This is going on our recipe book. Thank you. #kidappeoved

I’ve made these cookies 3 times this week. They are without a doubt the best low carb cookie recipe I have come across. Super yummy! I only put about 1/3 cup of sweetener in which is enough for me. Thank you for the brilliant recipe! Totally hits the spot when I’m craving choccie chip cookies!

Hi Carolyn!
Thanks for your response. We had it today and they tasted fine though little crumbly.
Can you please guide me about butter substitution or which butter can be used so that can try other recipes.
Blanched almond flour is available so can buy that for future use.
Regards,
Pooja

Hi Carolyn, I make these cookies all the time. Husband loves them. Can I substitute the Brown sugar Swerve for the regular swerve and molasses at the same amount? Do you think it will be more “chocolate chip cookie” like a toll house cookies?

Hi Carolyn, thank you for sharing all of your wonderful recipes and hard work with us! Do you have any links you could share of any good literature on the safety and the effects on health of Swerve or similar sweeteners? I have been hesitant to use it for my kids. Thank you!

Specifically on children? No, I don’t know of any that verify safety or say it’s not. There’s a good amount of cruddy opinion pieces out there and not enough clinical trials. But my kids have been consuming it for years. To be frank, it is far safer than sugar consumption, in my personal opinion (not validated by anything except observation!). Mind you, they eat one little bit of dessert per day, they don’t consume huge amounts of it.

I just made these tonight to satisfy a major chocolate craving in light of some bad news this last week. To say they hit the spot is an understatement! I didn’t have molasses on hand, so they’re not as golden brown as I’d have liked, but so tasty and such a great chocolate chip cookie. They took an extra minute or two in my oven, but I’m used to that!

Thank you, Carolyn. This blog has made a recent diabetes diagnosis a ton easier to deal with. I’m so grateful for my favorite comfort foods in a low carb style! These are a hit!

These cookies??? Out of this world! I have tried so many lowcarb cookies and they were Just oké. These are super chewy like the real deal. Did use the gelatin. Made cashewflour from raw cashewnuts (not a fan of the blanched almond flour taste) Doubled the sweetener (cause sweettooth) baked for 12 minutes. ABSOLUTELY AMAZING!! Thanks for sharing.

Oh my goodness. I know I am late to the party and OH MY GOODNESS. These are SO good. I was really worried my coconut wasn’t fine enough but these were absolutely fantastic. My husband and I agreed, these taste like regular old non-keto chocolate chip cookies! Thank you for all your amazing recipes!

These are the best damn Keto cookies I’ve ever made, I followed the directions exactly, except I used coconut flakes, I even used a 1/2 of a cut up 100% Cocoa bar, no sugar added, (it was all I had in the pantry) I didn’t know how it would taste, but the cookie is “sweet enough” that you couldn’t tell, and it was soooo delicious, thanks for a great recipe!

Hi, not sure if you’re still checking comments on this recipe, but I’m so glad to have found your site as i love to bake and have tried many recipes that, let’s just say, didn’t turn out. I loved the flavor and crunch of the cookies, they are oh-my-god good! However mine came out very flat and crumbly. I used Truvia instead of Swerve, do you think that could have caused the problem? Or could it have been the type of almond flour? Thank you and look forward to trying other recipes!

[…] Today Free and remove this ad! Low Carb Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe | All Day I Dream About Food This is from Carolyn at All Day I Dream About Food and she uses coconut and molasses (optional) in […]

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Secrets to Keto Baking

Tips and tricks to delicious and healthy recipes!

Looking for the best low carb recipes? You've come to the right place! I'm Carolyn, a major carnivore and an unrepentant sweet tooth. Here you will find all you need to enjoy the low carb keto lifestyle to the fullest! Read more